UE General Officers
May 30, 2014
United Electrical Workers Union, UE
May 30, 2014
United Electrical Workers Union, UE
United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America, (UE)
On February 22, the elected president of Ukraine was overthrown in a coup which was supported by the Obama administration. Since then, the country has been torn apart and violence has escalated. On May 2 in the southern city of Odessa, supporters of the new unelected Kiev government, including members of the violent extremist Right Sector party, surrounded peaceful, unarmed anti-government protestors who had taken refuge in the city's main union hall. The right-wing crowd then set the union hall on fire, and 46 people died by being burned alive or jumping to their deaths trying to escape.
We are troubled by this horrific atrocity, and by the fact that
mass murder was committed by burning a union hall. We are concerned about the
conflict in Ukraine, by the massing of Russian troops near Ukraine's eastern
border and U.S. and NATO troops and planes in neighboring Poland, Lithuania,
Latvia and Estonia, which signal the return of the Cold War and the threat of a
much hotter war.
A defining period in the history of UE was our union's courageous
opposition to the Cold War. At the end of World War II there was great hope
among union members and other Americans for a continuation of FDR's New Deal,
with progressive social and economic policies including national healthcare,
expanded Social Security, and progress against racial discrimination in
employment. What we got instead was the anti-union Taft-Hartley Act and the
Cold War. Military spending, including the nuclear arms race, continued to
trump all other priorities. Local conflicts all over the world were treated as
global showdowns between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. In the name of
"fighting communism," the U.S. sided with the French and British
colonial empires against independence movements, and backed many brutal dictators
against their own people. The 40-year-long Cold War included some very
hot wars - notably Korea and Vietnam. The CIA organized coups that overthrew
democratic governments that dared to disagree with the U.S. government or
corporations. On the domestic front, the Cold War was a massive attack on civil
liberties and an effort to wipe out organizations, including UE, that refused
to enlist in the Cold War.
UE said the U.S. government should direct its resources toward
making life better for its own people. UE favored negotiations to resolve
differences between the U.S. and the Soviets, and to end conflicts such as
Vietnam. UE said the arms race robbed human needs on both sides of the Cold War
divide. As UE President Albert Fitzgerald often said, "You can't have guns
and butter."
The Cold War supposedly ended with the 1991 breakup of the Soviet
Union and the Warsaw Pact, which had been composed of the U.S.S.R. and its
Eastern European allies. A key event was the 1990 agreement between the U.S.,
West Germany and the Soviet Union allowing the reunification of Germany. In
those negotiations, President George H.W. Bush promised Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev that NATO - the U.S.-led anti-Soviet military alliance -
would not expand any further east than Germany.
Yet despite that promise, and despite Russia and its former allies
no longer having communist governments, NATO has moved steadily eastward toward
Russia. NATO now includes the former socialist states of Hungary, Poland, the
Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Romania and Bulgaria, as well as three
former republics of the U.S.S.R. which border Russia - Lithuania, Latvia and
Estonia. Two more former Soviet republics, Ukraine and Georgia, have been
promised eventual NATO membership. NATO is now clearly an alliance against
Russia, sitting on Russia's doorstep.
In late 2013 the U.S. began expressing hostility toward Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovych, and sympathy with the often violent
anti-government protestors in Kiev. Yanukovych was not an exemplary leader - we
now know that he'd been feathering his own nest - but he was elected in a fair
election, and the U.S. supports many governments that are more corrupt and
undemocratic than his.
What made Yanukovych a target for regime change was his decision
in November to reject harsh loan terms from the European Union (EU) and
International Monetary Fund (IMF) - including the kind of pension cuts and
austerity that have driven Greece into poverty. Yanukovych instead accepted a
more favorable offer of economic aid from Russia. His proposal that Ukraine
have good economic relations with both Russia and the EU was rejected by the EU
and the U.S., which wanted a Ukrainian government hostile to Russia.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland met in December
2013 with Oleh Tyahnybok, head of the far-right Svoboda Party. In a 2012
resolution the European Parliament had called Svoboda "racist,
anti-Semitic and xenophobic" and appealed to democratic parties in Ukraine
"not to associate with, endorse or form coalitions with this party."
In May 2013 the World Jewish Congress labeled Svoboda "neo-Nazi" and
called for the party to be banned. Svoboda leader Tyahnybok has called for
ridding Ukraine of the influence of "the Moscow-Jewish mafia."
Svoboda is also anti-gay, anti-black, and hostile to equal rights for women.
But since the overthrow of Yanukovych, Svoboda holds four cabinet
ministries in Ukraine's "provisional government" (including deputy
prime minister.) In a Feb. 4 conversation caught on tape, Nuland and the U.S.
ambassador to Kiev discussed who would get which positions in the new
government, including cabinet seats for Svoboda.
In Europe since the end of World War II, there has been a
political taboo against allowing fascist and neo-Nazi parties into any
government. The Obama administration has now broken that taboo and allied our
country with fascists in Ukraine. According to German media reports, about 400
elite mercenaries from the notorious U.S. private security firm Academi
(formerly Blackwater) are taking part in Ukrainian military operations against
anti-government protesters in southeastern Ukraine. News that Vice President
Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden has joined the board of directors of Ukraine's
largest private gas company adds the element of conflict of interest. Obama's
policies toward Ukraine and Russia have significantly increased the chances of
military confrontation between the U.S. and Russia, the world's two nuclear
superpowers. This threatens world peace.
It is unclear whether the presidential election conducted on May
25, under conditions of near-civil war, will help to defuse the crisis in
Ukraine.
We reaffirm UE's historic position. We favor peace and friendly,
equitable economic relations between nations. We favor negotiations rather than
military confrontation to resolve disputes, including this one. We believe the
countries that defeated Nazism in World War II, including the U.S. and Russia,
should work together against any resurgence of racism, anti-semitism and
fascism in Europe.
Bruce Klipple, General President
Andrew Dinkelaker, General Secretary-Treasurer
Bob Kingsley, Director of
Organization
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